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For better or worse
Thirteen years ago, Vice President Dan Quayle attacked
the TV sitcom “Murphy Brown” for the title character's bearing a child
out of wedlock, claiming the show's failure to defend traditional family
values was encouraging America's youth to abandon marriage. His speech
kicked off more than a decade of outcries against the “collapse of the
family.”
Today, such attacks have given way to a kinder, gentler campaign to
promote marriage, with billboards declaring that “Marriage Works” and
books making “the case for marriage.”
These campaigns share the idea that people are willfully refusing to
recognize the value of traditional families, and that their behavior
will change if we can just enlighten them.
But recent changes in marriage are part of a worldwide upheaval in
family life that has transformed the way people conduct their personal
lives as thoroughly and permanently as the Industrial Revolution
transformed their working lives 200 years ago. Marriage is no longer the
main way in which societies regulate sexuality and parenting, or
organize the division of labor between men and women. And although some
people hope to turn back the tide by promoting traditional values,
making divorce harder or outlawing gay marriage, they are having to
confront a startling irony: The very factors that have made marriage
more satisfying in modern times have also made it more optional.
The origins of modern marital instability lie largely
in the triumph of what many people believe to be marriage's traditional
role: providing love, intimacy, fidelity and mutual fulfillment. The
truth is that for centuries, marriage was stable precisely because it
was not expected to provide such benefits. As soon as love became the
driving force behind marriage, people began to demand the right to
remain single if they had not found love or to divorce if they fell out
of love.
Such demands were raised as early as the 1790s, which prompted
conservatives to predict that love would be the death of marriage. For
the next 150 years, the inherently destabilizing effects of the love
revolution were checked by women's economic dependence on men,
unreliable birth control, harsh legal treatment of illicit children and
their mothers' social ostracism.
These restraints collapsed between 1960 and 1980. Divorce rates had long
been rising in Western Europe and the United States, and although they
leveled off following World War II, they climbed at an unprecedented
rate in the 1970s. This led some to believe the introduction of no-fault
divorce laws, which meant married couples could divorce if they simply
fell out of love, had caused the erosion of marriage.
The so-called divorce revolution, however, is just one
aspect of the worldwide transformation of marriage. In places where
divorce and unwed motherhood are severely stigmatized, the retreat from
marriage simply takes another form. In Japan and Italy, for example,
women are far more likely to remain single than women in the United
States. In Thailand, unmarried women now compete for the title of “Miss
Spinster Thailand.” Singapore's strait-laced government has resorted to
sponsoring singles nights in an attempt to raise marriage rates and
reverse the birth strike by women.
U.S. and British divorce rates fell slightly during the 1990s, but the
incidence of cohabitation and unmarried child-raising continues to rise,
as does the percentage of singles.
Both trends reduce the social significance of marriage in the economy
and culture. The norms that traditionally penalized unwed mothers and
their children have weakened or been overturned, ending centuries of
injustice but further reducing marriage's role in determining the course
of people's lives. Today, 40 percent of cohabiting couples in the United
States have children in the household, almost as high a proportion as
the 45 percent of married couples who have kids, according to the 2000
Census. We don't have a TV show about that yet, but it's just a matter
of time.
By the 1970s, women in America and most of Europe
could support themselves if they needed to. The 1980s saw an
international increase in unmarried mothers (paving the way for Murphy
Brown), as more people gained the ability to say no to shotgun
marriages, and humanitarian reforms lowered the penalties for
out-of-wedlock births. That decade also saw a big increase in
cohabitation before marriage.
Almost everywhere, women's greater participation in education has raised
the marriage age and the incidence of non-marriage. Even in places where
women's lives are still largely organized through marriage, fertility
rates have been cut in half and more wives and mothers work outside the
home.
Countries are having to codify the legal rights and obligations of
single individuals and unmarried couples raising children, including
same-sex couples. Canada and the Netherlands have joined Scandinavia in
legalizing same-sex marriage, and such bastions of tradition as Taiwan
and Spain are considering following suit.
None of this means that marriage is dead. Indeed, most people have a
higher regard for the marital relationship today than when marriage was
practically mandatory. Marriage as a private relationship between two
individuals is taken more seriously and comes with higher emotional
expectations than ever.
But marriage exerts less power over people's lives now
that most Americans spend half their adult lives outside marriage and
almost half of all kids spend part of their childhood in a household
that does not include their two married biological parents. And marriage
no longer determines political and economic rights.
It's hard to believe we could revive the primacy of marriage by
promoting traditional values. People may revere marriage in the
abstract, but most have adjusted to a different reality. The late Pope
John Paul II was enormously respected for his teaching about sex and
marriage. Yet during his tenure, premarital sex, contraception use and
divorce rose in almost all countries. The Bible Belt has the United
States' highest divorce rate. And although many American teens pledged
abstinence during the 1990s, 88 percent broke that pledge, according to
the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Youth released in March.
Although many Americans bemoan the easy accessibility of divorce, few
are willing to waive their personal rights. In states where “covenant”
marriage laws allow people to sign away their right to a no-fault
divorce, fewer than 3 percent of couples choose that option. Divorce
rates climbed by the same percentage in states that did not allow
no-fault divorce as in states that did. By 2000, Belgium, which had not
yet adopted no-fault divorce, had the highest divorce rates in Europe
outside of Finland and Sweden.
Nor does a solution lie in preaching the benefits of
marriage to impoverished couples or outlawing unconventional
partnerships. A poor single mother often has good reason not to marry
her child's father, and poor couples who wed have more than twice the
divorce risk of more affluent partners in the United States. Banning
same-sex marriage would not undo the existence of alternatives to
traditional marriage. Five million children are being raised by gay and
lesbian couples in this country. Judges everywhere must apply many
principles of marriage law to those families.
We may personally like or dislike these changes. We may wish to keep
some and get rid of others. But there is a certain inevitability to
almost all of them.
Marriage is no longer the institution where people are initiated into
sex. It no longer determines the work men and women do on the job or at
home, regulates who has children and who doesn't, or coordinates
caregiving for the ill or aged. For better or worse, marriage has been
displaced from its pivotal position in personal and social life, and
will not regain it short of a Taliban-like counterrevolution.
Forget the fantasy of solving the challenges of modern
personal life by re-institutionalizing marriage. In today's climate of
choice, many people's choices do not involve marriage. We must recognize
that there are healthy as well as unhealthy ways to be single or to be
divorced, just as there are healthy and unhealthy ways to be married.
We
cannot afford to construct our social policies, our advice to our own
children and even our own emotional expectations around the illusion
that all commitments, sexual activities and caregiving will take place
in a traditional marriage.
That series has been canceled.
Stephanie Coontz teaches family history at The
Evergreen State College in Olympia. She is author of the recently
published book, “Marriage, a History: From Obedience to Intimacy, or
How Love Conquered Marriage” (Viking).
Stephanie Coontz
12 June 2005
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2002327238_sundaymarriage12.html
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